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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas DalzellPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.580kg ISBN: 9780367107185ISBN 10: 036710718 Pages: 422 Publication Date: 14 June 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews""In a remarkable work that joins scientific rigour to the art of the story teller, Thomas Dalzell tells the tale of the missed encounter between Freud's discovery of the crucial place of the speaking subject in the understanding of psychosis and the biological objectifications of the makers of modern psychiatry, which still dominate current theory and treatment.""--Dr Cormac Gallagher, Lacanian psychoanalyst and founder of the School of Psychotherapy ""This work is novel, original, and exciting. Dr Dalzell's writing presents a balanced, eclectic, and logical exposition. It makes a unique contribution to the field of psychoanalytic research and is to be commended to all students intent on research in this field.""--Professor Kevin M. Malone, Professor of Psychiatry, School of Medicine and Medical Science From the Preface: ""Thomas Dalzell studies with precision the position of the best of classical psychiatry, as well as that of Freud and finally of Lacan. At the same time he does homage to a remarkable opus which was the object of these labours, that of a madman who, in his delirium and suffering, had enough humanism to leave to the savants a unique document made for their enlightenment.""--Dr Charles Melman, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, director of teaching in Lacan's École freudienne de Paris, and founder This work is novel, original, and exciting. Dr Dalzell's writing presents a balanced, eclectic, and logical exposition. It makes a unique contribution to the field of psychoanalytic research and is to be commended to all students intent on research in this field. --Professor Kevin M. Malone, Professor of Psychiatry, School of Medicine and Medical Science In a remarkable work that joins scientific rigour to the art of the story teller, Thomas Dalzell tells the tale of the missed encounter between Freud's discovery of the crucial place of the speaking subject in the understanding of psychosis and the biological objectifications of the makers of modern psychiatry, which still dominate current theory and treatment. --Dr Cormac Gallagher, Lacanian psychoanalyst and founder of the School of Psychotherapy From the Preface: Thomas Dalzell studies with precision the position of the best of classical psychiatry, as well as that of Freud and finally of Lacan. At the same time he does homage to a remarkable opus which was the object of these labours, that of a madman who, in his delirium and suffering, had enough humanism to leave to the savants a unique document made for their enlightenment. --Dr Charles Melman, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, director of teaching in Lacan's Ecole freudienne de Paris, and founder """In a remarkable work that joins scientific rigour to the art of the story teller, Thomas Dalzell tells the tale of the missed encounter between Freud's discovery of the crucial place of the speaking subject in the understanding of psychosis and the biological objectifications of the makers of modern psychiatry, which still dominate current theory and treatment.""--Dr Cormac Gallagher, Lacanian psychoanalyst and founder of the School of Psychotherapy ""This work is novel, original, and exciting. Dr Dalzell's writing presents a balanced, eclectic, and logical exposition. It makes a unique contribution to the field of psychoanalytic research and is to be commended to all students intent on research in this field.""--Professor Kevin M. Malone, Professor of Psychiatry, School of Medicine and Medical Science From the Preface: ""Thomas Dalzell studies with precision the position of the best of classical psychiatry, as well as that of Freud and finally of Lacan. At the same time he does homage to a remarkable opus which was the object of these labours, that of a madman who, in his delirium and suffering, had enough humanism to leave to the savants a unique document made for their enlightenment.""--Dr Charles Melman, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, director of teaching in Lacan's �cole freudienne de Paris, and founder" """In a remarkable work that joins scientific rigour to the art of the story teller, Thomas Dalzell tells the tale of the missed encounter between Freud's discovery of the crucial place of the speaking subject in the understanding of psychosis and the biological objectifications of the makers of modern psychiatry, which still dominate current theory and treatment.""--Dr Cormac Gallagher, Lacanian psychoanalyst and founder of the School of Psychotherapy ""This work is novel, original, and exciting. Dr Dalzell's writing presents a balanced, eclectic, and logical exposition. It makes a unique contribution to the field of psychoanalytic research and is to be commended to all students intent on research in this field.""--Professor Kevin M. Malone, Professor of Psychiatry, School of Medicine and Medical Science From the Preface: ""Thomas Dalzell studies with precision the position of the best of classical psychiatry, as well as that of Freud and finally of Lacan. At the same time he does homage to a remarkable opus which was the object of these labours, that of a madman who, in his delirium and suffering, had enough humanism to leave to the savants a unique document made for their enlightenment.""--Dr Charles Melman, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, director of teaching in Lacan's École freudienne de Paris, and founder" Author InformationThomas Dalzell Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |